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Residential Kaleidoscope

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Preindustrial: family-related, kinship/social rank first, ethnicity second ... Immigrant: social rank, age, gender, ethnicity more dominant than family status ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Residential Kaleidoscope


1
Residential Kaleidoscope
Geo309 Urban Geography
Instructor Jun Yan Geography Department SUNY at
Buffalo
2
Last Class
  • Foundations of Residential Segregation
  • Social interaction determined by social distance
    and physical distance
  • Social distance influenced by social status,
    household types, ethnicity, lifestyle

3
Outline
  • Theories In Residential Segregation Residential
    Ecology
  • The Chicago School Human Ecology
  • Factorial Ecology

4
Roots of Human Ecology
  • Ecology, particularly social ecology
  • Introduced by sociologists in University of
    Chicago in 1920s Chicago School
  • Benchmark of urban social theory
  • Attempt to explain residential segregation using
    ecological ideas
  • City as a kind of social organism
  • Consists of distinctive ecological units a
    particular mix of people in certain social niche
  • They compete and struggle for existence much
    like their biological counterpart
  • Social Darwinism Natural Selection

5
Natural Areas
  • Natural Areas
  • Much like its biological counterpart, Habitats
  • which are dominated by a certain group of people
  • The result of competition for living space by
    different social groups
  • Each exhibits different physical and social
    attributes and life style of their inhabitants
    the field study by Harvey Zorbaugh -- The Gold
    Coast and The Slum in Chicago

6
Natural Areas
  • Natural Areas
  • Dynamic, change over time
  • Penetration ? Invasion ? Succession ? Piling up
  • S-shaped curve describes the assimilation
    process of invasion group (migrants or immigrants)

7
Burgesss Concentric Zone Model
  • By Ernest Burgess in 1920s, based on observations
    in Chicago
  • Two important ecological processes
  • Centralization the result of agglomeration
    force in the center
  • Decentralization losers move out the periphery
  • A series of concentric zones An alternative land
    use model
  • CBDZone in TransitionZone of Workingmans
    HomesResidential ZoneCommuters Zone

8
Burgesss Concentric Zone Model
  • CBD
  • Core concentration of commercial, office, civic
    activities
  • Fringe manufacturing, warehousing/wholesaling,
    transportation terminal
  • Zone in transition
  • Invaded by commercial activities, thus
    deteriorated
  • Once high-class neighborhood, taken over by much
    lower class (migrants or immigrants)
  • Slum areas, high density

9
Burgesss Concentric Zone Model
  • Zone of independent workingmans homes
  • Blue-collar escaped from Zone in Transition
  • Usually 2rd generation of migrants or immigrants
  • Zone of better residence
  • Middle-class or upper, single family homes, large
    yards
  • Zone of Commuters
  • Upper-class, most expensive single family houses
  • Exurban areas, little industry, satellite towns
    or villages

10
Burgesss Concentric Zone Model
11
Burgesss Concentric Zone Model
  • Burgess is more interested in the assimilation
    process of migrants or immigrants S-shaped
    curve
  • 1st generation zone in transition
  • 2nd generation zone of workingmans homes
  • 3rd generation high-class residential or
    commuters zone
  • Highly descriptive more a metaphor than a map

12
Critics of Human Ecology
  • Its study area - Chicago
  • The Burgess s model can only apply to cities
    with similar background a dominant core, huge
    migrants or immigrants
  • Its strong ecological roots, thus lack of other
    dimensions cultural, ethnic, political,
    lifestyle
  • Its Biotic analogy natural selection?Nazi/Fascist
  • New approaches
  • With less crude mechanistic/biotic analogies
    replace the termnatural areas by social areas
    or neighborhood types
  • The use of statistical methods to analyze the
    patterns of the distribution of socioeconomic
    attributes within a city, part of Quantitative
    Revolution in Geography
  • Most important Factorial Ecology

13
Factorial Ecology
  • Comes from the term -- Factor Analysis A
    family of multivariate statistical methods
  • Attempt to measure or locate the patterns of
    residential segregation based on multiple
    socioeconomic characteristics
  • Various findings suggest
  • Order of importance (descendent) social status ?
    household status/lifestyle ? ethnicity
  • Each also has different spatial forms of
    residential patterns
  • Social status sectoral
  • Household status zonal
  • Ethnicity clustered
  • Consistent over space and time

14
Robert Murdies Diagram
  • Social space
  • Characterized by 3 factors socioeconomic
    status, family(household) status, and ethnicity
  • Physical space
  • The actual geographic space, independent from
    social space
  • Social space then superimposes itself onto
    physical space
  • The result a spiders web of sectoral-zonal
    lattice

15
Robert Murdies Diagram
16
Berry and Reess Model
  • On top of the spiders web, there are several
    modifying factors
  • Inner structures in ethnic areas additional
    differentiation based on household status and
    lifestyle

17
Berry and Reess Model
  • On top of the spiders web, there are several
    modifying factors
  • Star shaped growth pattern urban growth epochs
  • Multiple foci commercial and industrial centers
    in periphery

18
Star-Shaped Urban Growth In Buffalo
19
Dynamics of Factorial Ecology
  • The importance of various factors do change over
    time
  • Types of residential factor structures
  • Preindustrial family-related, kinship/social
    rank first, ethnicity second
  • Colonial social rank/ethnicity/migration status
    first, family status second
  • Immigrant social rank, age, gender, ethnicity
    more dominant than family status
  • Industrial income (based on occupation), social
    rank/ family status first, greater heterogeneity
    in race and ethnicity second Human Ecology,
    Factorial Ecology
  • Postindustrial much more fragmented, multiple
    foci, mixed result

20
Next Class
  • Contemporary Residential Segregation since 1970s
  • Reading chp 8. pp 217230
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